treat
verb OPAL WOPAL S
/triːt/
/triːt/
Verb Forms
Idioms Phrasal Verbspresent simple I / you / we / they treat | /triːt/ /triːt/ |
he / she / it treats | /triːts/ /triːts/ |
past simple treated | /ˈtriːtɪd/ /ˈtriːtɪd/ |
past participle treated | /ˈtriːtɪd/ /ˈtriːtɪd/ |
-ing form treating | /ˈtriːtɪŋ/ /ˈtriːtɪŋ/ |
- treat somebody/something with something to treat people with respect
- to treat people with caution/suspicion/dignity
- Treat your keyboard with care and it should last for years.
- treat somebody/something + adv./prep. All candidates will be treated equally, regardless of age.
- They treat their animals quite badly.
- She felt unfairly treated.
- treat somebody/something like something My parents still treat me like a child.
- treat somebody/something as something He was treated as a hero on his release from prison.
- treat somebody/something as if… They treat him as if he weren't even there.
Extra Examples- Parents still tend to treat boys differently from girls.
- He is guilty and should be treated accordingly.
- You should treat people with more respect.
- the tendency to treat older people as helpless and dependent
- He treated the idea with suspicion.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb- equally
- equitably
- fairly
- …
- tend to
- as
- like
- with
- …
- deserve to be treated
- I decided to treat his remark as a joke.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb- equally
- equitably
- fairly
- …
- tend to
- as
- like
- with
- …
- deserve to be treated
- treat something + adv./prep. The question is treated in more detail in the next chapter.
- These allegations are being treated very seriously indeed.
- treat something as something All cases involving children are treated as urgent.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb- equally
- equitably
- fairly
- …
- tend to
- as
- like
- with
- …
- deserve to be treated
- treat somebody for something She was treated for sunstroke.
- The students involved were treated for head injuries.
- treat somebody The clinic has treated several thousand patients free of charge .
- She was treated in hospital.
- treat somebody (for something) with something He was treated for depression with medication prescribed by his doctor.
- treat something to treat a disease/a condition/cancer
- The hospital treated forty cases of malaria last year.
- Antibiotics are used to treat bacterial infections.
- treat something with something The condition is usually treated with drugs and a strict diet.
Collocations InjuriesInjuriesBeing injured- have a fall/an injury
- receive/suffer/sustain a serious injury/a hairline fracture/(especially British English) whiplash/a gunshot wound
- hurt/injure your ankle/back/leg
- damage the brain/an ankle ligament/your liver/the optic nerve/the skin
- pull/strain/tear a hamstring/ligament/muscle/tendon
- sprain/twist your ankle/wrist
- break a bone/your collarbone/your leg/three ribs
- fracture/crack your skull
- break/chip/knock out/lose a tooth
- burst/perforate your eardrum
- dislocate your finger/hip/jaw/shoulder
- bruise/cut/graze your arm/knee/shoulder
- burn/scald yourself/your tongue
- bang/bump/hit/ (informal) bash your elbow/head/knee (on/against something)
- treat somebody for burns/a head injury/a stab wound
- examine/clean/dress/bandage/treat a bullet wound
- repair a damaged/torn ligament/tendon/cartilage
- amputate/cut off an arm/a finger/a foot/a leg/a limb
- put on/ (formal) apply/take off (especially North American English) a Band-Aid™/(British English) a plaster/a bandage
- need/require/put in/ (especially British English) have (out)/ (North American English) get (out) stitches
- put on/rub on/ (formal) apply cream/ointment/lotion
- have/receive/undergo (British English) physiotherapy/(North American English) physical therapy
Extra ExamplesTopics Medicineb1- She was treated for cuts and bruises.
- The drug is effective at treating depression.
- We can treat this condition quite successfully with antibiotics.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb- easily
- appropriately
- properly
- …
- be difficult to
- use something to
- for
- with
- be effective in treating something
- treat something (with something) to treat crops with insecticide
- wood treated with preservative
Extra Examples- Chemically treated hair can become dry and brittle.
- You need to treat this wood for woodworm.
- Water is discharged from the sewage works after being treated.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb- chemically
- for
- with
- treat somebody/yourself (to something) to pay for something that somebody/you will enjoy and that you do not usually have or do
- She treated him to lunch.
- Don't worry about the cost—I'll treat you.
- I'm going to treat myself to a new pair of shoes.
behave towards somebody/something
consider
illness/injury
use chemical
pay for something pleasant
Word OriginMiddle English (in the senses ‘negotiate’ and ‘discuss a subject’): from Old French traitier, from Latin tractare ‘handle’, frequentative of trahere ‘draw, pull’. The current noun sense dates from the mid 17th cent.
Idioms
treat somebody like dirt
- (informal) to treat somebody with no respect at all
- They treat their workers like dirt.